Forum Discussion
Sayings that irk me
In regards to
Irregardless
I could of
That reminds me of how jarring it is to my ears to hear anyone refer to a soft drink as a "pop," when obviously the correct term is "soda." ;-)
maratsade, Let's all get with the British way and just "queue up" and be "in the queue!"
GabeU, my mother, who was an English teacher, and even more of a grammar/spelling/pronunciation police officer than I, would have loved you and your list! Three terms I would add:
•Frustrated, not fustrated
•Library, not libary
•February, not Febuary
Things I cannot abide seeing in print:
•I need to loose weight.
•I want to see that show to.
•Anything with the word "prolly."
•I actually saw this in a submitted academic journal article from a full professor: I like to have my students pier review each other's work. (What does this entail? Study groups sitting out on a pier? Critical analysis done at the local Pier One Imports?)
•I wish I wouldn't of done that.
•Your welcome!
- debbie.jean.bro7 years agoAdvanced Tutormaratsade GabeU BirdDog MarkJFine et al.
I once text messaged my son, whose reply came back, "You are the only person I know who would use a semi-colon in a text!"
To which I replied, naturally, "How else do you expect me to join two independent clauses?"
MarkJFine, I've never heard "physical year," but I love it!!- debbie.jean.bro7 years agoAdvanced TutorGabeU, oh no! George W. Bush always said, "nukular"! In fact, there is a classic SNL skit where Bush and Tony Blair are holding a joint press conference. Blair says something about nuclear weapons and Bush corrects him and tells Blair, "It's pronounced NUK U LAR!"
- maratsade7 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
"'How else do you expect me to join two independent clauses?'"
How indeed?
Extra kudos for using "et al."
debbie.jean.bro wrote:
I once text messaged my son, whose reply came back, "You are the only person I know who would use a semi-colon in a text!"
To which I replied, naturally, "How else do you expect me to join two independent clauses?"
- maratsade7 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
"Let's all get with the British way and just "queue up" and be "in the queue!""
Jolly good. Rule Britannia!
"I like to have my students pier review each other's work."
Brilliant. Both academically stuffy, yet outdoorsy.
debbie.jean.bro wrote:a lot of funny things - GabeU7 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
debbie.jean.bro wrote:
GabeU, my mother, who was an English teacher, and even more of a grammar/spelling/pronunciation police officer than I, would have loved you and your list! Three terms I would add:
•Frustrated, not fustratedI occasionally hear people say flustrated, as well.
Oh, and another one: it's corroborate, not cooberate. No one has ever cooberated someone's story. :p
One of my biggest faults, which ends up happening far too often, is using an apostrophe in the word "its" when I don't need to. I sometimes misuse commas, as well. :(
Edit:
One more, which I heard again tonight, and which has to do with the military, is cache. It's pronounced as cash, not cashay.
- maratsade7 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
"One more, which I heard again tonight, and which has to do with the military, is cache. It's pronounced as cash, not cashay."
I hear this one often. I wonder if people are thinking of touche? Annoying all the same. As for touche, I know someone who uses it incorrectly all the time to mean "kudos." "Oh, you fixed the water cooler! Touche!" Groan.
GabeU wrote:One more, which I heard again tonight, and which has to do with the military, is cache. It's pronounced as cash, not cashay.
- MarkJFine7 years agoProfessor
I've seen "frutile" constantly misused instead of "futile" by an amateur videoblogger.
Even worse is that it's caught on as a catch phrase.
- maratsade7 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
Frutile = fruitless + futile
Flustrated = flustered + frustrated
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